100x is a free stock guessing game about 30 years of the Indian stock market. You see two real stocks from a specific time period—say Infosys in 1996 or Bajaj Finance in 2008—and you call which one turned ₹1 lakh into ₹1 crore. Get it wrong and your streak ends. Takes 10 seconds to learn. Surprisingly impossible to stop.
A 100 bagger is a stock that turns ₹1 lakh into ₹1 crore. In India, Titan in the late 1990s did it. HDFC Bank did it. Pidilite did it. Eicher Motors did it. But most stocks didn't. That's the whole game: learning which companies were compounders and which were traps. Which would be the next Infosys, and which would be the next Yes Bank.
You see one stock and a hidden stock. Tap HIGHER if you think the hidden stock's ₹1 lakh grew more. Tap LOWER if you think it grew less. The answer pops up instantly. You're right, you keep going. You're wrong, your streak ends. Simple.
It's genuinely free. No account to create. No download. No ads hiding behind paywalls. You'll pick up real stock names, real time periods, and a feel for how wild compounding actually works. Share your streaks with friends. Dare them to beat your score. Track how you're doing each day.
Yes. Free, no account, no download, works in English and Hinglish.
No. It's a game using real historical numbers. Not investment guidance.
About 140 major Indian companies from the 1990s onwards. The big names you've heard of.
Yep. Tap Share when the game ends and send your score or challenge a friend.